PC to Machttp://www.maclife.com/taxonomy/term/3921/all
enHow to Export Contacts from Address Book to a PChttp://www.maclife.com/article/howtos/how_export_contacts_address_book_pc
<!--paging_filter--><p><strong>I need to transfer a set of contacts from my Mac to someone who works on a PC. She’s already tried transferring the files with a USB drive, but her PC can’t open the files. We must be doing something wrong. Can you help?</strong><br /><br />To export contacts, open the Address Book application and select the contacts that you want to export. You can select multiple contacts by holding down the Command key and clicking on the contact entries. Choose File &gt; Export &gt; Export vCard. In the pop-up dialog, select the save location, and then click the Save button. After the export is complete, you will see a vCard file that contains the contacts that you selected. Transfer this file to the Windows PC.</p><p style="text-align: center;"><img src="/files/u307916/2012/01/ask/vcard_1.jpg" width="620" height="297" /></p><p style="text-align: center;"><strong>Ensure that you select Export vCard and not Address Book Archive. One is readable by a PC, the other is not.</strong></p><p>Over on the Windows machine, open the Contacts section of the user folder by searching for Contacts in the Start menu. Once there, click on the Import button in the toolbar. Select vCard, and then click Import. Once you locate the vCard file, the Import dialogs will walk you through the process. You will need to manually accept each contact.<br /><br />You can also import these vCard-flavored contacts into any vCard-friendly application (such as Outlook) using a similar process.</p><p><strong>GOT A TECH QUESTION OR A HELPFUL TIP TO SHARE?</strong></p><p>Email&nbsp;<a href="mailto:ask@maclife.com" target="_blank">ask@maclife.com</a>&nbsp;or write to Mac|Life,&nbsp;<br />4000 Shoreline Ct, Suite 400, South San Francisco, CA 94080</p>http://www.maclife.com/article/howtos/how_export_contacts_address_book_pc#commentsAddress BookPC to MacMacHow-TosThu, 15 Dec 2011 13:39:49 +0000Cory Bohon12877 at http://www.maclife.comTop 7 PC-to-Mac Switching Problemshttp://www.maclife.com/article/feature/top_7_pctomac_switching_problems
<!--paging_filter--><h3>There are a few things that come up regularly for people who’ve recently switched from a PC to a Mac. We boil down the most common hurdles So you can clear them with ease.</h3><p><a href="/files/u129772/pcmac_full.jpg" class="thickbox"><img height="145" src="/files/u129772/pcmac_380.jpg" width="380" /></a> </p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><strong>1. My brand-new Mac came without a right-click mouse, so now I have to buy an external two-button mouse.</strong><br /><br />Every Mac comes out of the box with the ability to right-click, but Apple made it especially confusing for switchers because right-clicking is always turned off by default. You have to make a trip to the Keyboard &amp; Mouse System Preference to turn it on. If your Mac came with an Apple-branded mouse, you might not realize that you have right-clicking ability because the right-click button is not a visible button separate from the left-click button--it’s touch-sensitive. Plus, all Mac laptops have touch-sensitive right-clicking on their track pads as well.<br /><br /><strong>2. Every time I launch Skype or Firefox, a white disk icon appears on my Desktop and disappears after a restart.</strong><br /><br />You actually never installed those apps properly. To install many Mac applications, simply drag the application’s icon (located on that temporary white disk image, which has the file extension .DMG) to your Applications folder. Then you can eject the white disk image by dragging it to the trash, and it won’t come back again.<br /><br /><strong>3. All my keyboard shortcuts are different on the Mac! And these Function keys at the top don’t work! And I miss the “Print Screen” button on my PC’s keyboard. How can I remember this confusing Shift-Command-4 keyboard shortcut to take a screenshot?</strong><br /><br />Most keyboard shortcuts are the same on PC and Mac, but on the Mac you use the Command key instead of the Control key. So, if you used Control-P to print on the PC, you would now use command-P to print on the Mac. Even better, you can customize almost every keyboard shortcut on your entire Mac to whatever is easiest for you to remember. Just go into your Keyboard &amp; Mouse System Preference and choose Keyboard Shortcuts. For even more keyboard control over your entire Mac experience, install a keyboard shortcut program like Keyboard Maestro ($36, <a href="http://www.keyboardmaestro.com/main/" target="_blank">www.keyboardmaestro.com</a>), QuickSilver (free, <a href="http://www.blacktree.com" target="_blank">www.blacktree.com</a>), or TextExpander ($30, <a href="http://www.smileonmymac.com" target="_blank">www.smileonmymac.com</a>). As for the function keys at the top of your keyboard, they all serve double-duty. Click on them normally and they control the hardware functions of your Mac, but hold down the “fn” key on your keyboard and they act like normal function keys. You can reverse this behavior in your Keyboard &amp; Mouse System Preference.<br /><br /><strong>4. I keep clicking on the green Maximize button, but the window still doesn’t fill my screen.</strong><br /><br />We’re Mac experts, and we have no idea what that green button is supposed to do. Try installing Right Zoom (free, <a href="http://www.blazingtools.com/downloads.html" target="_blank">www.blazingtools.com/downloads.html</a>).<br /><br /><strong>5. I love my Blackberry, but it won’t sync to my Mac. Don’t tell me to get an iPhone!</strong><br /><br />Try the Missing Sync for Blackberry ($40, <a href="http://www.markspace.com" target="_blank">www.markspace.com</a>). <strong>UPDATED:</strong> Whoops, Blackberry has released the OS X Blackberry Desktop sfotware. You can <a href="http://na.blackberry.com/eng/services/desktop/desktop_mac.jsp" target="_blank">get it here</a>. </p><p><strong>6. There’s not a lot of Mac software for what I want to do.</strong><br /><br />There‘s outstanding Mac software available in every category that you could possibly imagine. Some websites like versiontracker.com and macupdate.com are even dedicated to tracking all the Mac software that you can get for your Mac. And, if you really want to use an app that’s PC-only, you can always run Windows on your Mac at full speed using Boot Camp (free, built into Mac OS X Leopard) or VMWare Fusion ($80, <a href="http://www.vmware.com" target="_blank">www.vmware.com</a>).<br /><strong><br />7. I just bought a MacBook Pro. Are you seriously telling me that there’s no forward-delete key on this keyboard?</strong><br /><br />Hold down the “fn” key while pressing the delete key and it becomes a forward delete. </p><p>&nbsp;</p>http://www.maclife.com/article/feature/top_7_pctomac_switching_problems#commentsPC to MacProblemsswitchingFeaturesFri, 23 Oct 2009 16:21:53 +0000Scott Rose5139 at http://www.maclife.com